Programmes – Page 1320

  • News

    Embraer

    1995-03-15T00:00:00Z

    Juarez de Siqueira Britto Wanderley has become president of Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer. He replaces Ozires Silva, who has resigned. Wanderley was formerly senior vice-president for production. Silva will remain a consultant to Embraer's board. Frederico Pinheiro Flaury Curado, vice-president for subcontract and services, becomes senior vice- president commercial, replacing ...

  • News

    GE is not being so consistent

    1995-03-08T16:37:00Z

    Sir - An article headed "New birdstrike rules worry GE" (Flight International, 15-23 December, 1993) reported that GE was concerned the company could be singled out for special conditions by the US Federal Aviation Administration, because of the use of composite materials in the fan. At the time, ...

  • News

    Frustration of seeking a job

    1995-03-08T16:36:00Z

    Sir - I am a pilot with a UK regional airline seeking employment with some of the major scheduled and charter carriers, to further my career. It is frustrating to be told by some airlines that they are not recruiting, and do not foresee doing so, only to ...

  • News

    Lockheed

    1995-03-08T16:24:00Z

    Norman Augustine will retire as chief executive of Lockheed Martin on 1 August, 1997, to teach engineering at Princeton University. He will continue to serve the US aerospace powerhouse as its board chairman. Vance Coffman, president and chief operating officer will be elevated to chief executive upon Augustine's leaving. He ...

  • News

    Kodak in space

    1995-03-08T15:28:00Z

    Eastman Kodak has joined the Space Imaging company formed by Lockheed to operate a commercial remote-sensing satellite system, starting in 1997. The satellites will generate 1m-resolution digital images for the production of data products for a market which is forecast to be worth $5 billion in 2000. Japan's Mitsubishi has ...

  • News

    Ukraine International looks for European equity share

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    UKRAINE International Airlines (UIA) is in advanced talks with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and three foreign airlines over the possible sale of up to one-quarter of the carrier. Deputy president Dick Creagh says that the airline, 11.3%-owned by lessor GPA, with the rest held ...

  • News

    'Clean Wing' systems on test

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES NORTHWEST AIRLINES has begun operational tests of an experimental broad-area wing-contamination detection system on a McDonnell Douglas (MDC) MD-82. The test is aimed at the eventual development and certification of a production-standard system which will provide crews with automated, real-time, aircraft surface-contamination information. ...

  • News

    Providing the answers

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    The causes of accidents are often not found because of inadequate flight-data recorders. Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES   The United Airlines Boeing 737-200 which rolled on its back and crashed for no apparent reason on the approach to Colorado Springs in March 1991 carried a six-parameter ...

  • News

    Aeroflot looks West for its fleet renewal

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    Paul Duffy/MOSCOW AEROFLOT-RUSSIAN International Airlines (ARIA) has confirmed plans to lease further Western aircraft until upgraded Russian aircraft become available. Replacement of ARIA's 116-strong fleet of ageing and fuel-inefficient aircraft is a priority, acknowledges airline chief executive Vladimir Tikhonov, giving his report on the airline's performance ...

  • News

    GE90-powered 777 reaches Mach 0.96 in dive

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    THE GENERAL ELECTRIC GE90-powered Boeing 777 reached Mach 0.96 during a high-speed dive in February, as part of a faster-than-expected expansion of the aircraft/engine flight envelope. "We are well into the test schedule. In fact we're already at the point that we'd normally be at six weeks into ...

  • News

    UK CAA backs breather for 707s/DC-8s

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    Kieran Daly/LONDON THE UK GOVERNMENT is considering recommendations which would give operators of Boeing 707s and McDonnell Douglas DC-80-50s temporary waivers from European noise restrictions. Civil Aviation Administration proposals now with UK transport secretary Brian Mawhinney would give 12-month dispensations to about 75% of the dozen ...

  • News

    GE turboprop will power Sukhoi S-80

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    GENERAL ELECTRIC has agreed a deal to put its CT7 turboprop on the Sukhoi S-80 utility aircraft. A repair, overhaul and support deal for the engine has been put in place with Rybinsk Motors. Under the contract with Sukhoi, two CT7-9B turboprops will be delivered for flight testing ...

  • News

    ATR 72 crew 'knew about icing' snag

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    THE PILOTS of American Eagle Flight 4182 which crashed on 31 October, 1994, were aware that their ATR 72 was icing up, but did not believe that the problem was serious enough to cause them to lose control of the aircraft. A transcript of the aircraft's cockpit-voice recorder ...

  • News

    USAir sells off 11 Boeing 737-300s

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    USAIR IS SELLING 11 Boeing 737-300s to General Electric Capital (GECC). Terms of the transaction have not been disclosed. The financially ailing US carrier says that the aircraft sale is part of a plan to cut operating costs by at least $1 billion annually. It says ...

  • News

    Midway plans to lease A320s to operate from Raleigh-Durham

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    MIDWAY AIRLINES is to operate a fleet of Airbus Industrie A320s from its new hub operation at Raleigh-Durham Airport, North Carolina, recently acquired from American Airlines. The Chicago-based carrier is initially leasing four International Aero Engines (IAE) V2500-A1-powered A320s from Orix. The first two A320s will arrive in ...

  • News

    Fokker slashes costs in new restructuring plan

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON Fokker has embarked upon a radical programme of restructuring, job cuts and site closures in a bid to pull itself back into profit by mid-1996. Losses have been mounting at the Dutch manufacturer as output has dwindled to only 50 aircraft a year - ...

  • News

    Swissair in regional/charter shake-up

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH SWISSAIR HAS HANDED over its regional-jet operations to its Crossair subsidiary. In a second strategic move, Swissair and Crossair will absorb the loss-making charter flights of Balair/CTA - effectively ending the latter's operations. Both moves are aimed at cutting costs and restoring group profitability. By the ...

  • News

    Costly competition

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    Airbus chief Jean Pierson's recent hint that not all is proceeding smoothly within the Future Large Aircraft (FLA) consortium seems to be borne out by confirmation that the UK and Germany are locked in a desperate battle over the wing for Europe's proposed military transport. On the surface, such competition ...

  • News

    Transaero gives warning on profit shortfall

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    INDEPENDENT RUSSIAN airline Transaero has warned that its 1994 financial results will fall short of targets laid out at the start of the year. Although passenger numbers more than doubled, to over 530,000, Transaero president Dr Alexander Pleshakov says that the airline was affected by "an unfair taxation ...

  • News

    Baikal profitable

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    Flight International would like to make clear that the "Baikal" aviation company listed as going bankrupt in a recent Russian aviation feature did not refer to Baikal Airlines. The reference (Flight International, 15-21 February) was to Baikal Avia in Irkutsk, which was one of several small Russian aviation companies which ...